Qualcomm to invest $8.5 mn in expanding initiatives in India
19 Jan 2017
Chip maker Qualcomm has announced an investment of $8.5 million for expansion of its design initiatives in India, which would primarily include funding its Innovation Labs at Hyderabad and Bangalore. A portion of the investment earmarked for design initiatives will also be utilised for its Design in India Challenge 2017, a programme that nurtures promising start ups in the country.
The Qualcomm Design in India Challenge II will support companies in the areas of rural technology, biometric devices, payment terminals, agro technology, medical technology and smart infrastructure.
"After seeing the response during the 2016 edition of the Design in India challenge, we decided to go ahead with a second year, as well as expanding the number of participants Qualcomm nurtures through this programme from 10 to 16 participants in 2017," Jim Cathey, senior vice president and president, Asia Pacific & India, Qualcomm Technologies Inc said at a conference.
The San Diego-based maker of mobile phone chips is sharpening its focus on growing mobile and Internet of Things (IoT) ecosystem in India with R&D and localisation support. It expects to enable mobile and IoT vendors by providing advanced camera, audio, and RF design support with the launch of a new Innovation Lab at Hyderabad and expansion of current Innovation Lab in Bangalore.
Cathey, however, declined to divulge the exact quantum of investment or the hiring for expansion of the innovation labs.
The company today announced that three start ups - Carnot Technologies, iFuture Robotics and Uncanny Vision - had won the first edition of Qualcomm Design in India Challenge (QDIC) launched in 2015 in association with software body Nasscom. Over the last 12 months, ten shortlisted companies were incubated with initial prize money of $10,000 each and engineering support at Qualcomm India's Innovation Lab in Bangalore where they could transform their idea into prototypes.
In the final round, the companies were judged by the jury members consisting of industry, government and Qualcomm executives. In addition, the selected winners were awarded $100,000 each as part of the challenge.